I’ve been on social media platforms for many years. I don’t recall what came first, was it Facebook or MySpace? MySpace was founded in 2003, Facebook in 2004 (I joined in 2007), but I’m not sure when I created a MySpace account. I just logged in but it doesn’t show when I joined!
I enjoy sharing my life and my thoughts with friends, family and the global internet audience. I continue to tune my sharing - what I share, on what platform and how often. I clearly want to participate in lots of places with lots of people, but I struggle with the stagnation on some platforms, privacy matters, and the uncertainty of newer places.
Meta Facebook (FB). It remains the place for sharing personal content with friends and family.
Pros: privacy controls
Cons: presentation of photos; ads and promoted content in your feed; too many lurkers vs true participants and contributors; trusting your content to Meta.
Current status: active.
Meta Instagram (IG/INSTA). I feel it’s the most common platform for sharing photos publicly, but many users have private accounts. Designed for (vertical) phone photographers.
Pros: creativity features, e.g. adding music; sync with FB.
Cons: confusion on different sharing techniques and the associated restrictions on sharing and displaying media; ads and promoted content in your feed; cannot embed links; trusting your content to Meta.
Current status: active as pjmixer.
YouTube (YT). I feel it’s the most common platform for sharing videos publicly.
Pros: consistent look and feel; ability to have unlisted videos and control sharing.
Cons: ads; true private videos need viewers to have a YT account; lack of personal feedback for amateurs like me; trusting your content to Google.
Current status: active. I predominantly use my pjmixer account and it’s where I share my videos, phil.sewell is just to organize my business playlists.
X (Twitter). Still the most common platform for public conversations and reposting articles, but some users have private accounts. I used to share a lot, but I only go there on occasion these days to see stuff from people and organizations not on Threads.
Pros: audience and coverage.
Cons: too many reposts without adding to the conversation; trusting your content to X.
Current status: rare use but still have two accounts - philsewell and pjmixer.
WhatsApp. A messaging app that my ultimate frisbee friends treat as social media in our team groups.
Pros: texting and calling people via the internet.
Cons: clunky interface; trusting your phone number and content to Meta.
Current status: Occasional use for messaging.
Threads. A newer platform positioned as an alternative to X.
Pros: Familiar interface; decent presentation of media; feels less cluttered; no ads?; sync with FB and IG.
Cons: I haven’t found a way to create lists or groups; opening links; trusting your content to Meta.
Current status: active as pjmixer.
Flickr. It’s been around a long time (2004), I joined in 2007 when it was part of Yahoo. It is now owned my SmugMug and independent from the big monopolies. I have 13,873 photos on Flickr.
Pros: stats (I have 1.75M views), groups, organizing features, privacy settings.
Cons: public sentiment that it’s old fashioned.
Current status: active as pjmixer.
Vero. I’ve used this newer platform quite a lot. I recall it was optimistically positioned as an alternative to IG. From my POV, it’s frequented by lots of photographers.
Pros: high quality presentation features; flexibility, ability to share a variety of content, e.g. music and movie reviews.
Cons: closed community, i.e. non-intuitive discovery
Current status: occasional use as pjmixer.
Bluesky. The hottest tech talk this week for social media. It promises of independence and freedom, but I’m still learning and not so sure.
Pros: familiar interface; lots of flexibility.
Cons: lack of participation; needs work to create your connections and feeds.
Current status: I created accounts this week for pjmixer and philsewell.
Nostr. I found this on the guidance of a photographer, but it’s promise is big and has associations with bitcoin. It appears to be well architected and de-centralized, but it still requires a good dose of trust.
Pros: independence from a central platform provider, i.e. a company doesn’t own your content, nor controls your profile, connections and experience.
Cons: techie setup; lack of participation.
Current status: I created an account this week, my public key is: npub1mp08p6fyu3p0r8psycsgxcgcea9s5xzmx2tcg8ep4nfjpl4wpm6qajzn2s
LinkedIn. Dominant site for connecting with your business community.
Pros: Well organized.
Cons: dominance of industry promotional content; most business people are there, but there is inconsistent participation.
Current status: active.
Reddit. I can’t easily describe it as I don’t use it very often. Let’s say it is highly democratic opinion and advice site. It has an interesting popularity voting system, covers a high amount of subjects and has huge amounts of users.
Pros: Strong contribution.
Cons: Unusual, unattractive interface.
Current status: occasional use.
Pinterest. I spent some time on this platform a long time ago and then snapped out of it. It geared toward shiny material things and maybe experiences and is mostly geared toward the shopper, but could be seen as inspiration for creatives.
Pros: Different, one-of-kind?
Cons: Narrow focus.
Current status: no longer active.
There are other social media platforms that I’ve never participated in like TikTok, SnapChat, NextDoor and BeReal. Maybe others could comment on their pros and cons.
Finally, there are some outliers.
Teams. A Microsoft office messaging and on-line meeting platform that I use daily in my work life and in some situations is being used for social interaction in the workspace. It has some fun features and it works for me. I think Slack may have similar features, but I’ve never used it. Skype and Zoom are used in the workplace and I’d imagine have similar add-on social features.
Blogs and personal websites. If you have something to say, you perhaps write a blog post or create your own website. Like an opinion piece in a newspaper a well written post on a current topic could create a debate, invite comments and even go viral. For a long period of time I wrote regular blog posts across a wide variety of topics, including images and videos. A few friends provide comments and I have to delete unwelcome comments now and again. If I have something more substantial to share, I put in here. Like this post.
Email. Well, some might say it was the first form of social media. It was a way to communicate one-on-one, but as soon as someone added other addressees or created a distribution list, an email could quickly create a long thread of discussion.
If you’ve read this far, thank you. You may wonder what I’m doing today with all these options. It changes week to week, but it goes something like this.
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